Birds, fish, and wildlife give meaning and color to our
environment. They play important roles in the environment
from controlling populations of nuisance animals to providing
food for game hunting. When wildlife is threatened by
devises of chemistry and bad ideas, it affects everyone
on earth.

Our symbiotic relationship with wildlife cannot be understated
or underestimated. Yet, pesticide manufacturers created
products that, in the late 1950's, all but wiped out entire
populations of birds and today pose secondary poisoning
dangers to animals that sustain on other animals poisoned
by synthetic toxins. However, humans are still part of
that chain and not immune to the toxicological threat.
When a pest control company sprays synthetic toxins on
the exterior of your home or on your lawn, or a farmer
sprays toxins on his crops, the pesticide leaches into
the soil and ultimately finds its way into groundwater.
In many known instances, the pesticide ran-off into streams,
lakes, and creeks directly or as the result of being washed
into the waterway by rain. Plankton and other microscopic
creatures filter the water for food, small fish eat the
plankton and man or a bird or another fish eats the smaller
fish. Another predator may eat the bird, its waste products
fertilize plants, a deer may eat the plant and a human
may eat the deer. The symbiotic relationship existed prior
to the pesticides and continues despite the pesticides,
but the difference is that now, every organism in the
chain has been poisoned to some extent. As this cycle
repeated itself over months, years, and decades, the inevitable
result was that, according to Rachel Carson in the book
"Silent Spring" 1962; pesticide residue could be found
in the breast milk of nearly every lactating mother on
earth. At the time of publishing in 1962, about 200 million
pounds of pesticides showered down on U.S. soil. Today,
more than 1 billion pounds of toxic synthetic pesticides
poison every living creature in our country. No living
organism is spared its proportion of poison. Whether by
air, soil, water, plant, or ingestion of another animal,
the toxin makers ensure that everyone "takes his or her
or its medicine" in the now well-defined poisoning-for-profit
scheme. I question however if the makers of the toxic
synthetic poisons use their own products on their own
families.

For us to protect wildlife and thereby preserve our own
existence, we must demand the end of synthetic toxins
- especially when botanical products are so abundant,
equally as effective at controlling nuisance insect pests,
economically feasible, and inherently safe.

We are making our best effort to do our part. Informing
you and providing you with services that do not contaminate
the environment in a professionally licensed capacity
is an industry first. However, like all pioneers, we get
the proverbial arrows in the back. Nevertheless, we remain
undeterred and passionate about our mission.